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Averagesupernova said:I like to explain things in terms that makes it easy to visualize. 3-phase delta is a pretty easy one to answer. There are three transformer windings (secondaries) that are hooked in a series. Drawn out they appear as a triangle, hence the reason we call it delta. Each 'phase' comes off of a node from two windings. So, grab any two phases and you can see they are directly across a transformer winding. I don't see how you could not see that you can source power from any two phases. Maybe I missed the point?
Speaking of misnomers ... The word, "phase" is often incorrectly used.
This is where the confusion starts for most people. Although it has become accepted, it is confusing to call the 3 leads coming off a 3-phase transformer, "phases" (forget neutral and/or ground connections, for now). It is generally clearer to call those wires "legs": Leg A, leg B, & leg C. Measuring between 2 legs, you will see different phases. For example, you might find that the voltage measured from leg A to leg B is 240 volts. You will find that the voltage measured from leg B to leg C is also 240 volts, but that it lags the first voltage by 120 degrees (i.e. it is out of phase by 120 degrees). And, you will also find that a 3rd voltage can be seen by measuring from leg C to leg A and that it lags the 2nd voltage by another 120 degrees (240 degrees from the first voltage).
Remember that it takes two reference points to have a voltage; you can't say that a single wire coming off a transformer has a certain voltage (voltage is the difference in electrical pressure between 2 points). It must be measured in reference to another point. Also, it takes 2 or more voltage measurements to be able to find a phase angle between them. (So it is generally incorrect to give a single voltage measurement a phase angle). For simplicity, we usually we label the first of 2 or more measurement taken to be at 0 degrees. (In fact, we could use any number.)
So, if we call any (or all) of the three secondary wires coming off a 3-phase transformer (whether delta or wye) a "phase," what exactly does that mean? That single wire, by itself is useless and has no voltage, so it cannot be compared to a voltage and, therefore it has no phase angle. When you measure the voltage between any 2 legs, you are measuring across one of 3 coils, each giving a voltage at a different phase angle in relation to the other two.